卫生不平等和传染病流行:对全球卫生安全的挑战。

Sandra Crouse Quinn, Supriya Kumar
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引用次数: 262

摘要

在当今的全球社会中,传染病的爆发可以在世界各地迅速蔓延,这是由于我们跨越国界和大洲的快速旅行而加剧的。关于流感大流行的历史记载和关于传染病的当代报告清楚地表明,贫穷、不平等和健康的社会决定因素为传染病的传播创造了条件,现有的健康差距或不平等可能进一步加剧发病率和死亡率的不平等负担。然而,迄今为止,对多个国家流感大流行计划的研究发现,很少或根本没有认识到卫生不平等现象,也没有尝试让弱势群体参与进来,明确解决大流行对他们的不同影响。为了实现《全球卫生安全议程》的目标和宗旨,我们认为,从世卫组织到各个国家的国际合作伙伴必须努力解决健康的社会决定因素和现有的卫生不平等现象,并扩大其视野,将这些因素纳入其中,以便可能在社会弱势亚人群中开始的疾病不会被忽视并跨越国界传播。这些努力需要重新考虑监测系统,纳入社会人口统计数据;培训当地的研究人员和社区卫生工作者团队,他们不仅能够分析数据以识别疾病的风险因素,而且能够使用模拟方法评估替代政策对减少疾病的影响;整合社会科学学科,了解当地情况;并积极预测包括疫苗在内的充足卫生保健资源供应不足。如果不明确关注现有的卫生不平等现象和卫生的潜在社会决定因素,《全球卫生安全议程》就不太可能实现其目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Health inequalities and infectious disease epidemics: a challenge for global health security.

Health inequalities and infectious disease epidemics: a challenge for global health security.

In today's global society, infectious disease outbreaks can spread quickly across the world, fueled by the rapidity with which we travel across borders and continents. Historical accounts of influenza pandemics and contemporary reports on infectious diseases clearly demonstrate that poverty, inequality, and social determinants of health create conditions for the transmission of infectious diseases, and existing health disparities or inequalities can further contribute to unequal burdens of morbidity and mortality. Yet, to date, studies of influenza pandemic plans across multiple countries find little to no recognition of health inequalities or attempts to engage disadvantaged populations to explicitly address the differential impact of a pandemic on them. To meet the goals and objectives of the Global Health Security Agenda, we argue that international partners, from WHO to individual countries, must grapple with the social determinants of health and existing health inequalities and extend their vision to include these factors so that disease that may start among socially disadvantaged subpopulations does not go unnoticed and spread across borders. These efforts will require rethinking surveillance systems to include sociodemographic data; training local teams of researchers and community health workers who are able to not only analyze data to recognize risk factors for disease, but also use simulation methods to assess the impact of alternative policies on reducing disease; integrating social science disciplines to understand local context; and proactively anticipating shortfalls in availability of adequate healthcare resources, including vaccines. Without explicit attention to existing health inequalities and underlying social determinants of health, the Global Health Security Agenda is unlikely to succeed in its goals and objectives.

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